The satellite was equipped with five primary instruments: Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer (AMSR), Global Imager (GLI), Improved Limb Atmospheric Spectrometer-II (ILAS-II),
Polarization and Directionality of the Earth's Reflectances (POLDER), and
SeaWinds. These instruments were designed to monitor
Earth's
water cycle, study
biomass in the
carbon cycle, and detect trends in long-term
climate change. The mission was established to continue the work undertaken by
ADEOS I between 1996 and 1997.
Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer (AMSR) AMSR monitors water vapor, precipitation, sea surface, wind, and ice by means of microwave radiation emanating from Earth's surface and atmosphere. It is a radiometer that operates in eight frequency bands covering 6.9 GHz to 89 GHz, and monitors the horizontal and vertical polarizations separately. With a dish of aperture, the spatial resolution is in the 89 GHz band, degrading to at 6.9 GHz.
Global Imager (GLI) GLI (GLobal Imager) is an optical sensor to observe
solar radiation reflected from
Earth's surface and
map vegetation,
clouds, etc. The data is acquired in 23 visible/near-infrared, and in 13 far infrared channels. The scanning is done by a rotating mirror covering along track and cross-track, and at a resolution of .
Improved Limb Atmospheric Spectrometer 2 (ILAS-2) ILAS-2 maps the vertical distribution of
O3,
NO2,
HNO3,
H2O,
CFC-11,
CFC-12,
CH4,
N2O, and
ClONO2, as well as the distribution of temperature and pressure, all in the
stratosphere. It observes the absorption spectrum in Earth's atmospheric limb in the 3-13 micron wavelength band, and in the 753-784 nm band of the occulting
Sun. The altitude resolution is .
Polarization and Directionality of Earth's Reflectances (POLDER) POLDER measures the polarization, and spectral characteristics of the solar light reflected by aerosols, clouds, oceans and land surfaces. Eight narrow band wavelengths (443, 490, 564, 670, 763, 765, 865, and 910 nm) are covered by the instrument which enables identification of the physical and optical properties of the aerosols and their role in radiation budget.
SeaWinds SeaWinds is a
scatterometer that provides wind speed and direction by observing the microwave reflection from ocean surfaces. With its dish, it scans the surface along conical surfaces at 18
RPM. It provides speed at an accuracy of 2
m/s, wind direction at an accuracy of 20°, both with a spatial resolution of . == Subsystems ==